This week saw Hillary Clinton demonstrate why she is the Democratic candidate conservatives want to run against; Jeb Bush demonstrate once again that he and Clinton share many of the same positions, and why he is the "great white hope" of the Republican establishment; Rand Paul and Marco Rubio undercut their own campaigns with votes in the Senate, Ted Cruz make an important speech no one reported, and not-a-candidate-yet Donald Trump take the laurel for the week by making the best case we've heard yet for Ted Cruz's candidacy.

Other speakers include KCarl Smith, founder of the Frederick Douglass Republicans, John Whitbeck, chairman of the Republican Party of Virginia, Ibn Warraq, an author who will discuss what the West faces from Islam, Martha Boneta, who will speak about farm freedom and property rights and Julian Walker, who will talk about the war on energy. The Master of Ceremonies is Ron Wilcox, organizer for the Northern Virginia Tea Party.

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen's campaign barred BreitbartNews reporter Matt Boyle from attending one of their open to the media events. Shaheen showed that she's been one of Obama’s biggest Senate supporters and that she approves of his running roughshod over the inconvenient freedom of the press.

The only reason to invent a cool sounding non-existent weapons qualification, instead of simply listing the reality, is to hide the fact that, like the rest of his military and congressional career, Gary Peters’ weapons qualifications were undistinguished.

An exclusive investigation by Breitbart’s Matt Boyle has uncovered extensive evidence that on the campaign trail Michigan Democratic Senate nominee Congressman Gary Peters exaggerated and misrepresented his military service record.

It is long past time we had the kind of open debate and truth-telling that Senator Paul’s “reasonable degree of foresight” and “basic hindsight” would require, including deconstructing the web of lies that has been built to justify arming the so-called “moderate” Syrian rebels.

The precedent of Trent Lott’s loss of his Senate leadership position for a racially insensitive comment ought to disqualify Harry Reid from holding his position in national politics, but Reid gets a pass because perpetual outrage about real or imagined racial slurs and slights is the almost exclusive province of the Left and liberal Democrats.